Without a verb, you would just have a jumble of words. The verb conveys the meaning of the sentence, or the association of the words to each other.
For instance, your question has the compound verb "do need." Without that, no one would understand what "Why sentences a verb" means.
To be grammatically correct, every sentence mustcontain a subject and verb.
If you rely on adverbs to create interesting sentences, the result can be lazy verb choices and weak sentences.
A complete sentence always has both a subject and a verb. If either the subject or the verb is missing, then it is a fragment. For example, "The cat sits on the bed" is a complete sentence because it has both a subject (the cat) and a verb (sits). "The cat" by itself is a fragment because it doesn't have a verb.
The verb for constructing something again is rebuild or reconstruct.Some example sentences are:"We need to rebuild this house"."We should reconstruct the bridge".
Sentences do not need nouns. Some sentences have no nouns at all.A noun is a word for a person, a place, or a thing.Sometimes a pronoun takes the place of a noun in a sentence.A sentence requires only a subject and a verb, and to convey a complete thought.Examples:Grandmother is coming soon. (the subject is the noun 'grandmother', the verb is 'is coming', the word 'soon' is an adverb modifying the verb 'coming')She is coming soon. (the subject is 'she', a pronoun; there are no nouns in the sentence)Sometimes a sentence can be just the verb. In many imperative sentences, the subject is implied.Example: Stop! (the subject is implied, for example, "Driver stop!" or "You stop!")
Example sentences (with verbs):The dog drank the water.My mom put cookies in my lunch.I would like a bicycle for my birthday.The movie was very funny.A sentence without a verb is not a sentence.
Can you make me examples of sentences with these orders?: 1.article-adjective-noun-verb-preposition-adjective. 2. helping verb-pronoun-verb-preposition-verb-article-noun?. 3. verb-article-noun-adverd 4.proper noun-conunction-pronounn-helping verb-verb-adverb 5. pronoun-helping verb-adverb-verb-pronoun 6. preposition-pronoun adjective-noun-pronoun-helping verb-verb-pronoun
No. < That was a sentence without a verb.
For make sentences in present perfect we just need the verb ''to have (HAS)" + the past participle of the verb. eg:. have or has + frightened.
Sentences can be constructed by using that word as an adjective or as a verb.
Yes and no! Love is a stative verb, you can use it to do linking and action verb sentences.
Yes and no! Love is a stative verb, you can use it to do linking and action verb sentences.